Imagine going into the offices of a television commissioner in, say, the early 2000s. Imagine suggesting that the key to Saturday night viewing on a major television channel involved a show about ballroom dancing, hosted by a man in his late 70s.
Take the context of the last ten or 12 years out of it, and just think for a minute what the reaction would be. Could you imagine a single American network touching it? Can you imagine a commercial broadcaster in the UK giving it a whirl?
Yet in 2003, this is just the proposal that producer Richard Hopkins put together. He took it into the BBC, and, to be fair, got knocked back. A little while later, the BBCâs own Fenia Vardanis had a not dissimilar idea. The corporation thus put Hopkins and Vardanis together, and Strictly Come Dancing â sold as Dancing With The Stars in the US â was born. It got a prime time slot. Bruce Forsyth was hired to host. It was a hit from day one. A bold, risky, broad gamble that worked.
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Strictly Come Dancing has consequently emerged as a huge ratings hit, regularly trouncing ITVâs more commercially-focused The X-Factor in the ratings. As Michael Grade may have once said, surely thatâs champagne all round.
The Perils Of Being Popular
Yet it seems the popularity of the BBC â certainly in the current political climate â may yet be its Kryptonite. There appears to be a growing feeling amongst the current government that the BBC should be using its substantive receipts from the licence fee to fund more niche programming, rather than chasing ratings. In the last month, weâve learned that over ÂŁ600m from the BBCâs coffers is set to fund the licence fee for over 75s, at a time when job cuts at the corporation are already being announced. Yet thatâs just the beginning of what most concede to be times of real change for the organisation.
Ultimately, on the surface at least, itâs the high ratings that continue to paint a target on the BBCâs back. The argument runs that the BBC should use the bulk of its money â as it actually does, but letâs go with it for a second â on more niche programming. Why spend the money on shows like Doctor Who and EastEnders, when thereâs no commercial organisation that wouldnât? (overlooking, of course, the fact that the BBC took a gamble on both to start with. And that through its most popular show, EastEnders, itâs given a voice to issues that struggle otherwise to get an airing).
Itâs not tricky to see the road ahead with the argument here, and it doesnât point to a happy future for the corporation. Letâs say the BBC stops mixing in populist output amongst its content. It would be fair to assume that its ratings would drop. When said ratings drop, in comes the next argument: why should everyone have to pay a licence fee, when the programmes just arenât as popular any more?
Not for nothing are there very real fears for the shape of a future BBC right now.
But still: letâs pause for a minute and consider just whatâs happening.
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The Green Paper
Last week, the British government published a green paper on the future of the BBC, with culture secretary John Whittingdale telling MPs that heâs looking for the corporation to âthriveâ. The green paper kickstarts a public consultation to review the BBCâs charter. The consultation itself runs until October 8th 2015, with the current charter expiring at the end of 2016.
In his introduction to the green paper, Whittingdale writes that he feels âthe BBC is at the very heart of Britainâ, adding that âit is one of this nationâs most treasured institutionsâ. He then adds that âI want to hear from people all over the UK, so I can understand what this country wants from and for the BBCâ. It is understood that Whittingdale is a genuine advocate of the BBC, although whether that view is shared by many of his colleagues remains to be seen.
Whittingdale then its that we need to ask âsome hard questionsâ. Specifically, âwhat should the BBC be trying to achieve in an age where consumer choice is now far more extensive than it has been before? What should its scale and scope be in the light of those aims and how far it affects others in television, radio and online? And what are the right structures of governance and regulation?â
Whittingdale has been quick to debunk the accusation that heâs declaring war on the most populist segments of the BBC â the likes of Strictly, Radios One and Two, Sherlock, EastEnders, Doctor Who and such like â but does argue that it âmust continue to evolveâ.
Which, on paper, doesnât really sound that unreasonable. But what lies beneath the language?
The Defence
The last week or so has seen a collection of people â famous and otherwise â leaping to the BBCâs defence. A Twitter hashtag â #BackTheBBC â has been adopted, and articles have sprung up online, sensing that the corporation is facing choppy waters.
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Itâs always a little awkward reading defences from people whose daily income is beholden to the BBC in truth, as itâs hard to see it as an impartial argument when thatâs the case. Mind you, The Express running an article about how Express owner Richard Desmond could make the BBC better couldnât help but make me chuckle. Weâll come back to that point shortly, though.
Letâs get to the nub of it. Underneath the friendly, warm and calming language of the green paper, thereâs a feeling that the subtext here is for the government to radically overhaul the BBC, and its funding. It gets a chance to do this every ten years, when the BBCâs charter comes up for renewal, but unluckily for the Beeb, this time, weâve got a majority government in the early stages of its term.
Furthermore, you donât have to look far to find complaints from Conservative politicians about the alleged left-wing bias of the BBC (a regular accusation put to the corporation by the British newspaper press in particular). Thereâs a strong feeling among some that many within the current government want to give the BBC a bloody nose at best, or inflict substantive changes at worst.
The problem, as I see it, is that when these issues tend to get talked about in public, the same arguments come up. The BBCâs handling of controversies has hardly been exemplary (although ironically, itâs subsequently reported on its own failings better than any other news organisation), whilst spending big bucks on bringing X-Factor rival The Voice to the UK seems averse to the culture that brought the aforementioned Strictly Come Dancing to fruition. When it pays millions in salaries to people â although a lesser feature than it once was â that too inevitably is a magnet for criticism.
And yet every day of every week, the BBC is broadcasting programming that nobody else would touch. Shouldnât someone in high office, or with a popular platform, be pointing this out?
Across its television channels, across local TV, across its multitude of radio platforms, online, and on the World Service, it invests in material that would be â most of the time â tricky to sustain under a commercial broadcasting funding model. Not all of it works, but thatâs part of the point.
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Removed from the need â at least in theory â to attract tens of millions of people to every piece of content, the BBC is in a position to take gambles. You want a modern take on Sherlock Holmes, steeped in the writing of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle? A documentary about steam railways? Broad coverage of the womenâs football World Cup? A radio documentary about a new percussion instrument? This is the kind of material that the BBC is constantly ing.
Because itâs so big, and because it makes so many programmes youâre just as likely to loathe as like, the BBC is thus a target. Weâve all got things we donât like about the corporation, and rightly so. But conversely, you never fully appreciate what youâve lost until its gone, either completely or in spirit.
Danger
Thatâs the danger here. To see the likes of The Times running a front page story questioning the future of the BBC, neglecting to point out in an equal-sized font that its proprietor is arguably its key competitor, simply doesnât help the debate. Worse, it makes it an uneven one.
Then thereâs the Daily Mail. Feel free to skip the next two paragraphs if youâre tired of Daily Mail criticisms, but I do think itâs worth throwing this into the discussion.
If youâre looking for a prime example of a media organisation whose focus is purely on chasing numbers, where pursuit of the pound usurps outright humanity, then go and have a look at the Daily Mailâs front page. Worse, its poisonous website (and arguably its key feature, âthe sidebar of shameâ) which reportedly attracts 100 million readers a day.
Itâs the opposite of public service broadcasting, and its content reflects that. The BBC is clearly a competitor to the Mail, online at least, and thus story after story on Mail Online has been launching salvos in the corporationâs direction. Say what you like about the BBC, but it is bound by statute to offer balance, to give oxygen to both sides of the argument. Newspapers in this country are not. It is not hard to see how that affects content.
The truth is that something feels different this time. That thereâs a genuine threat to the BBC, from a government â whether you side with it or not â that has a window of opportunity, and a Parliamentary majority â where it can affect the changes it wants. The problem is, itâs not clear yet just what changes it ultimately has up its sleeve, and how ceremonial the consultation process is.
BBC Director General, Tony Hall, seems to fear the worst. Heâs adamant that the BBC has a duty to âinform, educate and entertainâ, each of those three words being of real importance. âI believe the BBC should continue to make programmes for everyone. A BBC that doesnât inform, educate and entertain is not the BBC the public know and love. The great majority are happy to pay the licence fee. The BBC belongs to this country. The public are our shareholdersâ, he said. The BBC will publish its own proposals for its future in September.
The BBC isnât a perfect beast, nor will it ever be. Itâs interesting that, outside of the UK, the threat to the BBCâs funding has been met with genuine surprise, that such an establishment in global broadcasting could and should be meddled with. Inside the UK? Thereâs a feeling that itâs been coming, and that the next year or two is going to be pivotal to the BBCâs future.
Yet itâs worth bearing things in mind. For every Jeremy Clarkson furore, thereâs a small news story on Radio Lincolnshire that highlights the achievement of a charity, or a school, or an individual in the area. For every The Voice, thereâs a Kermode & Mayo Film Review Show (find us one better). And for every episode of Bake Off (and heck, we love a bit of Bake Off), thereâs a season such as BBC Threeâs wonderful Defying The Label line-up.
The BBC costs less per day than any national newspaper, or subscription TV network in the UK, and thatâs because of the unusual way itâs funded. And while itâs right and proper for it to be interrogated, and held to (not least questioning the fairness of the licence fee for those who genuinely canât afford it), once the guts are ripped out of it, itâs not coming back.
At the moment, thereâs a spreadsheet somewhere in government thatâs playing with financing models for the BBC, and how much or little it needs to go forward in whatever guise is chosen for it.
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But you know the problem with spreadsheets? They can tell you the cost of anything you like. Yet they canât tell you the value of a single thingâŚ